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The new tourist attraction coming to San Francisco is billed as “not for the faint of heart.”

Could it be a tour of apartments that rent for $5,000 a month? A peek at the newest $300 prix fixe dinner menu in town? An up-close look at the sinking Millennium Tower?

No, it’s rats. Live ones. And not the ones you might get to see for free in the Tenderloin. These are cleaned up, adoptable rats.

And at the San Francisco Dungeon, you can have coffee and a pastry as they scurry around. (Uh, eat quickly unless you want to share.)

The Rat Cafe is a new, two-day-only feature at the Dungeon, an attraction that takes tourists and locals through 200 years of the city’s colorful and off-color history. This “immersive, pop-up” cafe will be open for two skin-crawling days only, July 1 and July 8.

On those days, the price of Dungeon admission ($49.99) will include coffee or tea plus pastry, plus 15 minutes of rodent interaction, plus entrance to the attraction.

The aim was to create a “frighteningly funny encounter” — one that could only be found at the Dungeon, executive Matthew Clarkson of the Merlin Entertainments Group parent company said in a statement. “Drinking coffee while a rat is on the loose? That’s not for the faint of heart.”

But, should you instead bond with one of the furry little guys, know that you can re-create this experience at home. These “ambassador rats” will be placed here by Rattie Ratz, a Bay Area nonprofit that rescues, rehabilitates and puts rats up for domestic adoption.

Will visitors have to sign a waiver before entering the Rat Cafe? There’s no official word yet, but we imagine any lawyers who work for an outfit called the Dungeon would be on top of that.

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